Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!

First we have the poisonous and most abundant Green Gilled Lepiota;Chlorophyllum molybdites growing in a grassy lawn;

Next we have the edible Bolete mushroom;Gyroporus subalbellus growing in sandy soil, off the beaten path;

Next we have a large Agaricus mushroom with pink gills;Agaricus floridanus; said to only grow in Florida;Found at the edge of a grassy field (of which was once a cow pasture);This mushroom is of questionable ediblility and therefore considered not-edible;

Ok, next i found a little baby Reshi fungus growing underneath a small Oak tree;Ganoderma lucidum, traditionally known by the Chinese to contain medicinal healing properties;Very pretty fungus, nothing to consider consuming though;

Lastly i came across these pink and brown gilled Agaricus mushrooms;Agaricus subalachuanus; found along a grassy path along edge of a lake;These mushrooms are also of questionable edibility;Although they smelled very sweet and yummy, i would never dare eat them though.Keep shroomin,GGreatOne234

Attn PWN hunters: If you should come across a bluing Psilocybe matching P. pellicolusa please smell it.
If you detect a scent reminiscent of Anethole (anise) please preserve a specimen or two for study and please PM me.

Awesome now I know what the hell an Agaricus is. I've seen them all the time. What's so cool about shroomin is you meet all the other species and they become interesting in their own right. I've seen those Lepiotas grow to the size of a small dish...